Early Childhood Courts

Background

Using the National ZERO TO THREE organization’s Safe Babies approach and the Miami Child Well-Being model, Florida’s early childhood court emerged in 2014 and is one of the primary initiatives within the Office of Family Courts. Early childhood court addresses child welfare cases involving children under the age of three. It is a problem-solving court where legal, societal, and individual problems intersect.

Healthy attachment and early brain development, from birth to age three, is crucial to a child's future social-emotional health, school-readiness, and life-long well-being. Infants and toddlers in the child welfare system are at extraordinarily high risk for developmental delays, non-optimal attachment relationships, trauma, and toxic stress that can affect their adjustment and well-being for years to come -- often, tragically, for a lifetime. Early childhood court allows courts to take what is currently known about the appropriate services and practices for early brain development and make them available to the most vulnerable children. For additional information view the Hope and Healing video.

The multidisciplinary Dependency Court Improvement Panel developed best practice standards which are based largely on research and analysis that has been conducted on Safe Babies sites in other states as well as research and analysis of specific early childhood evidence-based interventions. The Florida Supreme Court adopted the Early Childhood Court Best Practice StandardsPDF Download and CommentaryPDF Download in November 2019. The Steering Committee on Problem-Solving Courts is in the process of finalizing a certification program for all problem-solving courts with best practice standards in place. Core components of early childhood court include judicial leadership, a community coordinator, monthly court reviews, evidence-based child-parent therapy, frequent parent-child contact, and the use of multidisciplinary family team meetings.

The goal of Florida's early childhood court is to:

  • improve child safety and well-being
  • heal trauma and repair the parent/child relationship
  • promote timely permanency
  • stop the intergenerational cycle of maltreatment

Current Status

Florida’s early childhood court has grown from just a few sites in 2014 to 32 sites in 2023. The partnership between the Office of the State Courts Administrator, Florida State University, ZERO TO THREE, and other valuable partners has made it possible for the initiative to expand.

Below is a map of early childhood court sites throughout the state.

 

A map of the Early Childhood Courts Judges across the state.

 

 

Measuring Success

ZERO TO THREE's Safe Babies Court Teams boast timely permanency and a substantial reduction of re-maltreatment. Permanency can also be referred to as case closure, with the child placed in a permanent home. Florida’s data continues to show positive results, particularly in days to permanency. Implementation of the best practice standards will increase data uniformity and promote fidelity of the approach statewide.

About The Data

Read the early childhood court (ECC) data analysis report conducted by the Florida Institute for Child Welfare (FICW) in 2022PDF Download.

Early Childhood Court (herein referred to as “ECC”), like other problem-solving courts, addresses the root causes of justice system involvement through specialized dockets, multidisciplinary teams, and a nonadversarial approach. Offering evidence-based treatment, judicial supervision, and accountability, problem-solving courts provide individualized interventions for participants, thereby reducing recidivism and promoting confidence and satisfaction with the justice system process. The goal of Florida's ECC is to improve child safety and well-being, heal trauma, repair the parent/child relationship, promote timely permanency, and stop the intergenerational cycle of maltreatment. Florida’s ECC initiative has grown in the nine years since inception from a few sites in 2013 to 32 sites in 2022.

See the tables below from the 2022 analysisPDF Download for a glance, at the permanency outcomes. 

2022 Analysis ECC vs Non-ECC outcomes and permanency time

 

Past Analyses

During the 2018 session, the Florida Legislature allocated funding for the Florida Institute for Child Welfare (FICW) to conduct a one-year state-wide evaluation of Florida’s early childhood courts. The evaluation aimed to provide a better understanding of the level of implementation, characteristics of participating sites, outcomes of participating children and families, and cost effectiveness. An executive summary PDF Downloadfrom the FICW completed mixed method evaluation in June 2019. 

Read the summary of the early childhood court (ECC) outcomes analyses conducted by the Office of the State Courts Administrator in 2020PDF Download.

Publications and Resources

Early Childhood Court BrochurePDF Download

Early Childhood Court Recidivism ProtocolsPDF Download

A multitude of publications and resources related to early childhood and ECC are available through FSU’s Center for Prevention and Early Intervention Policy website and YouTube channel.

Thinking About Starting an Early Childhood Court?

What is ECC?PDF Download

ECC ResourcesPDF Download

ECC Best Practice StandardsPDF Download

Implementation StagesPDF Download

ECC Exploration Road Map for New SitesPDF Download

ECC Installation Roadmap for New SitesPDF Download

Resources for Existing Early Childhood Court Sites

ECC Best Practice StandardsPDF Download

Roadmap for Existing SitesPDF Download

Implementation StagesPDF Download

Florida Supreme Court Governance Groups

The Steering Committee on Families and Children in the Court works to establish a fully integrated, comprehensive approach to handling all cases involving children and families. The steering committee is charged with assisting the statewide multidisciplinary dependency court improvement panel – the panel that oversees ECC implementation.

Contact the Office of Family Courts at ociecc@egyptawe.com for additional information on early childhood courts.

Last Modified: November 22, 2024